Media & Advertising Kit
Tycho

The Hawk And The Hare, Part Four

Friday, December 29 2006 - 12:28 AM
by: Tycho
It is here - the final page of The Hawk And The Hare. Why is is called that? Well, now you know.

I go into phases where the DS is my constant companion, just as I did with the SP, and the wealth of recent media for the system has only fanned the flames of my ardor. You are aware, I am sure, that Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings - essentially the sequel to XII itself, a part of the "Ivalice Alliance" Final Fantasy Twelve spin-offs and re-issues - had a trailer drop for it over Christmas that is really a lot to take in. You may want to take note of 1up's fascinating rundown of the known data - it sounds for all the world like what a XII fan would crave: real-time battles, with the gambit system intact.

That's just the beginning of the SquareEnix onslaught, though. Hit up the trailer from It's A Wonderful World, check out its startling pedigree in this preview, or drown in Japanese Demon Writing at the main site. As the only fans of Crystal Chronicles worldwide, this may not be delicious to you - but a trailer has finally hit for the DS iteration of the franchise entitled Ring of Fates. It's longish, and the screens are small, but it's all we have and we must be strong.  If you take all these alongside the Dragon Quest announcement we discussed previously - a direction I understand has received a mixed reaction - you begin to almost fear the power of this strange machine.  

From the moment I chose to insult Gabe's spelling in the last post, I felt confident that I would screw something up in my own, and pored over my output with a watchmaker's precision. A drunken watchmaker's precision. The precision of a schizoid vagrant who has recently found a watch. I resolved the issues in the old post, because I could no longer abide them - but the crimes were real. Let this be their epitaph.

This said, to imply some parity between my occasional lapses and his aggressive, animal assault on language is dangerous. It is also specious - a word he doesn't know.

As of today, Friday, December the 29th, your efforts with Child's Play have amassed $963,160(!!!).   This is by no means the final figure, nor  is it the final post on the subject - there is still a tremendous amount of tabulation to occur, new checks, community initiatives, last minute rushes, and perhaps even New Year's Epiphanies.  I have faith that we will reach a million straight up in donations, and if we do not, I am steeling myself to make a financially debilitating charitable contribution.

(CW)TB out.

these are the hands we're given

Gabe

CTS stuff

Friday, December 29 2006 - 4:43 AM
by: Gabe

Following “The Feast of Afterwinter” we waited a full nine months before doing “As Spring Dawns”. One of the things I try and do with the CTS strips is force myself to draw things that I don’t normally draw. If you look back through them you’ll see that they almost all start with some sort of nature scene. Obviously that sort of imagery is super important to the whole Samurai theme. But also I have a hard time drawing that sort of thing so it’s a good exercise.

The current storyline is a great example of that, today’s page especially. I really never draw animals and so today’s page was extremely hard. I must have drawn the first four panels fifteen or twenty times. I had plenty of great reference for the hawk and the rabbit but simplifying them down into cartoon form was really hard for me. The problem was I wanted them to be simple but not “cartoony”. In my head I was thinking about the sort of effortless lines you see in a sumi-e painting.

I’m really proud of how the whole storyline came out. I think it’s definitely my best work to date. I am already starting to see the mistakes though, like the right arm on the CTS in today’s page. Most importantly I think it just works. It reads well and the pacing on each page is solid. Overall I think this one was a success. I never know going into a CTS strip if I’ll like what I end up with. I guess that’s part of the fun for me.

Last time I shared a CTS drawing by one of my heroes, Stan Sakai. Today I have another one for you. This was drawn for me be Stephen Silver of Kim Possible fame.

I’ve said before that Stephen is probably the single biggest influence on my work and so this piece is a real treasure for me. I keep it right here on my desk in a nice frame. Well it was a nice frame until Tycho threw a plastic frog at my head as hard as he could. It missed and hit the frame shattering the glass in it. He’s a fucking douche bag.

Here are a few detail shots from the new comic.

Like I said before the Rabbit was a huge challenge for me. Making it simple without being a cartoon was a challenge. I tried dozens of different designs before I settled on this one. Essentially it’s just an outline and then I used the shading to give it some volume.

I like the way the Hawk turned out. He was also hard to simplify. For a while I was trying to draw a lot of the feathers but ended up just implying them with the dark brown swatches across his head.

I used very few photoshop tricks with this whole piece. My goal from the beginning was to keep it simple. I did hit this panel with a very slight glow just to give the feeling of warmth coming from the tea house. I really wanted to show the difference between the toasty interior and the snowy cold outside.

So there you go. That’s my “director’s commentary” for the CTS. I’ve gotten a couple mails from people telling me they weren’t fans of the character before but after reading my history of him they appreciate it a lot more. I’m really glad that’s the case even if it’s just for a few of you. For me the CTS is much more than a samurai story. It’s a chance to tell a different kind of stroy, learn new techniques, and just plain get better.

Thanks for indulging us. On Monday we will return you to your regularly scheduled programming.

-Gabe out